>>19138360
These languages are read right to left, the rest are left to right. This has an effect on mind function, thought, memory… and when spoken backwards, on reality.
Arabic
Aramaic
Azeri
Divehi
Fula
Hebrew
Kurdish
N'ko
Persian
Rohingya
Syriac
Urdu
When any language is spoken in reverse, curious effects can be achieved. This is why in 1913 Aleister Crowley suggest the adept learn to think and speak backwards, curiously not suggesting any specific language…
That said, NATO backwards is OTAN, the vowel syllabic equivalent to Wodin, Odin, Odan- 'lord of frenzy', or 'leader of the possessed'.
Vowel intonation being OhAh, like in Noah. OhDAhn
Old English Wōden, Old Saxon Wōdan, Old Dutch Wuodan, and Old High German Wuotan (Old Bavarian Wûtan).[3][4][5] They all derive from the reconstructed Proto-Germanic masculine theonym Wōðanaz (or Wōdunaz).[3][6] Translated as 'lord of frenzy',[7] or as 'leader of the possessed',[8] Wōðanaz stems from the Proto-Germanic adjective wōðaz ('possessed, inspired, delirious, raging') attached to the suffix *-naz ('master of').
More than 170 names are recorded for Odin; the names are variously descriptive of attributes of the god, refer to myths involving him, or refer to religious practices associated with him. This multitude makes Odin the god with the most known names among the Germanic peoples.[15] Professor Steve Martin has pointed out that the name Odinsberg (Ounesberry, Ounsberry, Othenburgh)[16] in Cleveland Yorkshire, now corrupted to Roseberry (Topping), may derive from the time of the Anglian settlements, with nearby Newton under Roseberry and Great Ayton[17] having Anglo Saxon suffixes. The very dramatic rocky peak was an obvious place for divine association, and may have replaced Bronze Age/Iron Age beliefs of divinity there, given that a hoard of bronze votive axes and other objects was buried by the summit.[18][19] It could be a rare example, then, of Nordic-Germanic theology displacing earlier Celtic mythology in an imposing place of tribal prominence.
In his opera cycle Der Ring des Nibelungen, Richard Wagner refers to the god as Wotan, a spelling of his own invention which combines the Old High German Wuotan with the Low German Wodan.